PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Breaching the breech protocol

Tel Aviv University researcher advocates returning to old-school methods for delivering breech babies

2010-10-27
(Press-News.org) Most babies are delivered head-first, but in about 4% of all deliveries babies are "born breech" ― with their buttocks or feet first. Doctors usually exercise caution and use caesarean sections (C-sections) as the delivery method of choice for such births, believing it safer for the baby. After a large-scale international study in 2000, C-sections became the near-universal choice for such births.

But now researchers at Tel Aviv University are saying that, under certain circumstances, traditional vaginal delivery for breech babies is not only safe for baby, but even safer for mommy.

Recent studies by a group of scientists including Prof. Marek Glezerman of Tel Aviv University's Sackler Faculty of Medicine and the Rabin Medical Center make this case. Published in major obstetric journals world-wide and presented recently at the Canadian Congress on Breech Delivery, Prof. Glezerman's research indicates that breech babies are no more at risk during vaginal delivery than C-section, and there is reduced morbidity and mortality for the mothers. Based on his findings, Prof. Glezerman is campaigning worldwide for a return to skilled vaginal delivery of breech babies.

The safer way for moms

Caesarean section, explains Prof. Glezerman, is not just another method of delivery. A major surgical procedure, a C-section is not only riskier for a woman and decreases chances she will be able to breastfeed, it also increases maternal risks in future pregnancies. A large number of C-sections are performed because a woman had a breech presentation in the past, he explains ― once a woman has delivered by C-section, it becomes more dangerous and occasionally impossible to deliver vaginally, since the uterine walls and muscles are at increased risk for rupture.

While it is much easier to perform a C section than successfully deliver a breech baby vaginally, says Prof. Glezerman, many women can benefit medically by the return to traditional techniques. "We are trying to unite obstetricians and midwives in the field to revive vaginal delivery for breech presentations," he notes. Prof. Glezerman's initiative provides scientific evidence to those physicians and midwives looking to return to more traditional birth methods for breech.

Back to the future

Prof. Glezerman says that retraining the obstetrics community in these traditional methods is an urgent task, because the medical field now has two generations of medical residents with hardly any training in vaginal birth for breech deliveries. "The skill has disappeared," he explains. "Residents are no longer taught these techniques, and senior physicians are doing it less and less. We need to go back to the future and relearn what has been forgotten."

At the Rabin Medical Center in Israel, Prof. Glezerman runs workshops for the newest generation of gynaecologists and obstetricians on techniques for vaginal delivery for breech babies. His courses include techniques of breech delivery, changing presentation from breech to head and management of different breech presentations. With these workshops, Prof. Glezerman hopes to reintroduce critical delivery skills into the field, and raise awareness that breech presentation of babies does not always necessitate C-section deliveries.

Of course, says Prof. Glezerman, physicians still need to be able to recognize dangerous risks when they arise. In those cases, vaginal delivery is not a viable option ― but doctors must judge each situation individually.

### American Friends of Tel Aviv University (www.aftau.org) supports Israel's leading, most comprehensive and most sought-after center of higher learning. Independently ranked 94th among the world's top universities for the impact of its research, TAU's innovations and discoveries are cited more often by the global scientific community than all but 10 other universities.

Internationally recognized for the scope and groundbreaking nature of its research and scholarship, Tel Aviv University consistently produces work with profound implications for the future.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

6 new isotopes of the superheavy elements discovered

2010-10-27
Berkeley, CA—A team of scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory has detected six isotopes, never seen before, of the superheavy elements 104 through 114. Starting with the creation of a new isotope of the yet-to-be-named element 114, the researchers observed successive emissions of alpha particles that yielded new isotopes of copernicium (element 112), darmstadtium (element 110), hassium (element 108), seaborgium (element 106), and rutherfordium (element 104). Rutherfordium ended the chain when it decayed by spontaneous fission. ...

Haptoglobin as an early serum biomarker of virus-induced type 1 diabetes in rats

2010-10-27
Type 1 diabetes (T1D), formerly known as juvenile diabetes, is a multifactorial disease of complex etiology characterized by the autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells. In addition to genetic susceptibility, it is generally accepted that environmental factors play important roles in triggering disease, with virus infection having perhaps the strongest association. Multiple viral infections including cytomegalovirus, mumps, rubella, enteroviruses, and parvovirus have all been associated with human T1D. Indeed, the effects of diverse viruses in triggering T1D may ...

USDA scientists helping keep in-demand smoked salmon safe to eat

2010-10-27
Scientists with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) are helping ensure that the smoked salmon that's always a hit at festive gatherings also is always safe to eat, including among their achievements the development of a first-of-its-kind mathematical model that food processors and others can use to select the optimal combination of temperature and concentrations of salt and smoke compounds to reduce or eliminate microbial contamination of the product. The studies are led by food technologist Andy (Cheng-An) Hwang with the USDA Agricultural Research Service's (ARS) ...

Halloween horror story -- tale of the headless dragonfly

2010-10-27
CORVALLIS, Ore. – In a short, violent battle that could have happened somewhere this afternoon, the lizard made a fast lunge at the dragonfly, bit its head off and turned to run away. Lunch was served. But the battle didn't happen today, it happened about 100 million years ago, probably with dinosaurs strolling nearby. And the lizard didn't get away, it was trapped in the same oozing, sticky tree sap that also entombed the now-headless dragonfly for perpetuity. This ancient struggle, preserved in the miracle of amber, was just described by researchers from Oregon State ...

Getting the big picture quickly

Getting the big picture quickly
2010-10-27
SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 27, 2010 – University of Utah computer scientists developed software that quickly edits "extreme resolution imagery" – huge photographs containing billions to hundreds of billions of pixels or dot-like picture elements. Until now, it took hours to process these "gigapixel" images. The new software needs only seconds to produce preview images useful to doctors, intelligence analysts, photographers, artists, engineers and others. By sampling only a fraction of the pixels in a massive image – for example, a satellite photo or a panorama made of hundreds ...

Portable breast scanner allows cancer detection in the blink of an eye

2010-10-27
Professor Zhipeng Wu has invented a portable scanner based on radio frequency technology, which is able to show in a second the presence of tumours – malignant and benign – in the breast on a computer. Using radio frequency or microwave technology for breast cancer detection has been proven by researchers in the US, Canada and UK. However, up to now, it can take a few minutes for an image to be produced, and this had to be done in a hospital or specialist care centre. Now Professor Wu, from the University's School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, says concerned ...

Rosendin Electric Receives Design-Build Merit Award from DBIA for Work on Nogales International Waste Water Treatment Plant

2010-10-27
Rosendin Electric (www.rosendin.com), the nation's largest private electrical contractor and a 100-percent employee-owned company, has been recognized by the Design-Build Institute of America (DBIA) for its contribution to completion of the Nogales International Waste Water Treatment Plant in Rio Rico, Arizona. At the 2010 Design-Build Conference & Expo held in Las Vegas last week, the DBIA awarded the 2010 Water/Wastewater Over $25 Million Design-Build Merit Award to PCL Construction as the contracting firm, Stantec Engineering as the engineering firm, and Rosendin ...

Pro Energy Consultants' Customer Satisfaction Consistently High

2010-10-27
Pro Energy Consultants, a national energy auditing company, has consistently received high customer satisfaction ratings, the company reported today. Pro Energy, established September 2008, began carefully tracking its customers' satisfaction levels the following year. "This is attributed to the professionalism of our franchise owners nationwide and the fact that an energy audit really does benefit homeowners in many ways," said Pro Energy Consultants Chief Operations Officer Suave Brachowski, who says the satisfaction rating is currently at 99.8 percent. "After all, ...

Experience Mapping Launches New Website

2010-10-27
Experience Mapping author, Karen Newman, announced today that her industry acclaimed book now has a new comprehensive website containing detailed information, testimonials, real-life case studies and reviews. Experience Mapping is a process for taking an inventory of your skills, abilities, training, education, experience, and anything else that enables you to earn an income, and then realigning all of those assets and resources in a new career. "It's a simple and totally effective process that can absolutely change your life," said Newman, "just like it changed mine." As ...

Farella Braun + Martel "Open Sources" Award-Winning Diversity Initiative

2010-10-27
Borrowing from the technology industry, Farella Braun + Martel LLP is "open sourcing" its Diversity Pipeline Internship Program curriculum aimed at diverse or disadvantaged high school students. The details of the program are now available to the legal community and firms seeking to adopt similar initiatives to minimize the significant start-up investment involved in developing and launching an internship program. "An 'open source' philosophy has helped many software developers in their quest to innovate and build new programs," says managing partner Steve Lowenthal. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Eating rate has sustained effects on energy intake from ultra-processed diets, new study reveals

Rise in expectant mothers in UK with autoimmune diseases since millennium

Majority of riders and drivers in UK 'gig economy' suffer anxiety over ratings and pay, study suggests

Virginia Tech researchers develop recyclable, healable electronics

Cognitive outcomes similar after noncardiac surgery whether perioperative hypotension- or hypertension-avoidance strategies employed

Research spotlight: regional disparities in opioid overdose mortality persist despite national decline

Fighting myeloma with fiber: Plant-based diet offers promise

What makes someone leave a Medicare Advantage plan?

ASCO: New antibody-drug conjugate shows promising safety and response rates for patients with rare blood cancer

Advancing personalized medicine through pharmacogenomics: Insights from Ochsner Health

Researchers tested an asthma drug for treating alcoholism. It failed except with this group

Set it and forget it: Autonomous structures can be programmed to jump days in advance

Iron from coal, steel industries alters North Pacific ecosystem

Canadian researcher receives funding from ARIA to unlock potential of plants

Visionary support from Veale Foundation will establish university hospitals Veale Healthcare Transformation Institute

Investigating cocaine addiction using fruit flies

Fruit flies on cocaine could reveal better therapies for addiction

New data shows MMR vaccination rate decline across US

Clinical validation of a circulating tumor DNA–based blood test to screen for colorectal cancer

Screening colonoscopy yields among adults ages 45 to 49 after lowering the colon cancer screening age

Trends in county-level MMR vaccination coverage in children in the United States

Brewed for longevity: drinking coffee linked with healthy aging in women

Researchers find early driver of prostate cancer aggressiveness

Insect protein blocks bacterial infection

New study casts doubt on the likelihood of a Milky Way – Andromeda collision

Prevalence of artificial sweetener neotame in U.S.-marketed disposable e-cigarettes

E-cigarette warnings lower vaping interest and raise quit intentions

Record high: Study finds growing cannabis use among older adults

Trends in past-month cannabis use among older adults

How to create aqueous 100 nm-sized materials with polycavities

[Press-News.org] Breaching the breech protocol
Tel Aviv University researcher advocates returning to old-school methods for delivering breech babies